Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you go on the Private Schools board you'll read that many of the schools have online teaching happening, up and running with teachers and other students logging in and actively pursuing new material.
I had thought MCPS was in the same boat as everyone but this just makes me realize how ill prepared they are and then how slow as molasses they are to respond to need.
Its devastating.
Yup! Sucks to be in mcps right now. Private school kids are able to continue their education while public school kids suffer!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you go on the Private Schools board you'll read that many of the schools have online teaching happening, up and running with teachers and other students logging in and actively pursuing new material.
I had thought MCPS was in the same boat as everyone but this just makes me realize how ill prepared they are and then how slow as molasses they are to respond to need.
Its devastating.
Yup! Sucks to be in mcps right now. Private school kids are able to continue their education while public school kids suffer!
Anonymous wrote:If you go on the Private Schools board you'll read that many of the schools have online teaching happening, up and running with teachers and other students logging in and actively pursuing new material.
I had thought MCPS was in the same boat as everyone but this just makes me realize how ill prepared they are and then how slow as molasses they are to respond to need.
Its devastating.
Anonymous wrote:Achievement gap will broaden regardless b/c it's mostly due to parenting/home environment, and schools closed == total parent influence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think MCPS leadership was planning to just stay open and were caught off guard by Hogan's decision to close schools for two weeks. I have high schoolers, and each has one teacher that is providing assignments and really trying to keep learning on track. The other teachers, not so much. I wouldn't be surprised if they just give everybody As for the last two quarters and call it done for the year.
HUH? My understanding is that teachers were explicitly forbidden from assigning work. We are in a W and the teachers are abiding by this directive.
Anonymous wrote:I think MCPS leadership was planning to just stay open and were caught off guard by Hogan's decision to close schools for two weeks. I have high schoolers, and each has one teacher that is providing assignments and really trying to keep learning on track. The other teachers, not so much. I wouldn't be surprised if they just give everybody As for the last two quarters and call it done for the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good grief - it's been three days. Give them time to figure out what and how. You can't just magically throw a switch to convert 12,000 teachers and 165,000 students from an analog to a digital system.
The DCUM demographic has nothing to do but sit at home and complain about other people's inadequacies and failings.
Anonymous wrote:I think MCPS leadership was planning to just stay open and were caught off guard by Hogan's decision to close schools for two weeks. I have high schoolers, and each has one teacher that is providing assignments and really trying to keep learning on track. The other teachers, not so much. I wouldn't be surprised if they just give everybody As for the last two quarters and call it done for the year.
Anonymous wrote:Good grief - it's been three days. Give them time to figure out what and how. You can't just magically throw a switch to convert 12,000 teachers and 165,000 students from an analog to a digital system.